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Vendor Profile
TAS Marketing:
Coming up through the ranks by experience
Steve Michaels’ company, TAS Marketing, has seen
and experienced many changes in the telephone answering service industry
throughout his long career. Steve
got into the telecommunications field in Eugene, Oregon in 1975 working as a
salesman for Record-A-Call selling answering machines.
Once the leads were generated, he traveled throughout Oregon,
Washington, and northern California contacting prospects.
One method he used to close the sale included using his disc jockey
skills to put a professionally sounding message on the outgoing greeting.
From there he started his first company, Interstate Communications
Marketing, where he sold call diverters to businesses who wanted to transfer
their after hour calls to another location.
This method of call transference was especially successful in the real
estate field where agents would take turns receiving inquiry calls after
hours. In 1976, Michaels was hired by Candela Electronics to sell
their electronic answering service system.
It was a product that incorporated an LED box at the TAS office and a
call diverter at the customer’s office that would be manually programmed to
send a three-digit number down a standard phone line identifying the caller.
Steve sold his first system in Bend, Oregon.
This innovative technology foreshadowed the end of hardwire off-premise
extensions. Even so, it would be
some time before DID service was introduced.
Wanting to experience the big city, Steve moved to
the San Francisco Bay area where he continued to sell call diverters for
Barbary Coast Communications. There
he opened the market for this new call transference idea to companies who were
advertising in many phone books but had only one central location and phone
number that was a long distance call to potential customers in the outlying
areas. He would offer the
companies a local phone number in the area that the book was advertised in,
thereby generating more business using a local number.
One problem that occurred was where to physically install the call
diverters. “We installed them
in funeral parlors, taxi companies, or any place that we could get into 24
hours a day.” It was quite a
network.
In 1977, Steve moved to Los Angeles where he worked
as a salesman for Pacific Communications selling voice logging equipment.
He was the top salesman for the 3M products and was instrumental in
changing logging from reel-to-reel to a cassette system.
His primary sales were made to police and fire departments.
His first encounter with the TAS industry came in
1978 working for CAS Systems located in Sunnyvale, California.
Acting as sales manager for the company, Steve sought out answering
services that were looking for a way to computerize their businesses.
A major complaint from the owners was concern over finding operators
who could type. This CAS system
used DID and call-diverters to transfer the calls to the service; it was quite
affordable. Sales were brisk
because ATSI had contracted with a large company called Lynch to design a
computerized system for their use but it was very costly and overkill for the
TAS application. At the same
time, Startel had developed a computer system that could interface to the
Candela system. So, instead of
only getting a three-digit readout, the Startel system provided a whole screen
of information.
In 1979, Steve felt the need to start his own company
and branched out on his own, starting TAS Consultants.
He saw there was a need for a consultant to fill the gap by helping the
TAS owner understand and upgrade from hardwired cordboards to newer computer
technology. One method of doing
this was to publish an in-depth study that evaluated all of the equipment
being offered at the time. It was called “TAS Equipment Analysis Report.”
Steve reminisces about his first consulting job with Joe Wofford in
Houston, Texas. He states, “I
was scared to death because I had never done this type of thing before and who
was I to give out advice regarding such a large acquisition.”
But he states, “If I didn’t know the answer to something, I could
sure find out.” His consulting
practices allowed him to intervene between the manufacturer and the TAS
resulting in an experience that would last a lifetime.
Steve’s consulting business was in full gear when a
new start-up company called ACI, Advanced Communications, Inc., approached him
in 1981. They had a revolutionary
new product that could send text messages from a computer over the phone lines
to a small printer. This was in
the days before fax was widespread. They
had developed a product but needed someone to market it. Steve seized upon this opportunity because he had seen the
need in many operations to download messages to the client’s office early in
the morning thereby eliminating extra staffing during peak hours.
For the next four years, he traveled to every state in the union.
One of the hot selling points was that if the owner of the TAS bureau
would buy one terminal and ten printers, Steve would return to their office
and actually go out in the field with them to sell and install the printer.
This is where he met many of the TAS owners that he knows today.
“I would go out to the customers office with the owner, sell them on
the idea of having all their messages printed out right on their desk.
Then to finalize the sale, I would half to crawl under their desk and
sometimes jury-rig the printer to a back line.
I saw a lot of feet and phone wires at that point of my career!”
Steve was instrumental in taking ACI public and with
the newly acquired funding, the company decided to expand its marketplace
outside of the TAS industry so Steve again returned to consulting on a full
time basis. A voice mail company
called Centigram contacted him in 1985 and hired him as an outside consultant
to come up with a marketing plan to address the TAS industry. Steve set up a network for the company using the services of
Bill Hunter with American Voice Mail, located in Ohio, as its main
distributor. He attended many
trade shows and used his numerous contacts as prospective buyers.
Some bureau owners were afraid that this new voice mail technology
would put them out of business. The
progressive thinkers of the time used it as another service offering and for
message dump to reduce peak hour traffic.
After his contract with Centigram was over, several
other vendors, wanting him to sell their products, contacted Steve.
It was at this time that he decided to change the name of his company
to TAS Marketing. Among some of the products that TAS Marketing distributed
were the DC-7, a dialout controller system that kept track of outgoing calls.
Another very popular product was the AVI operator training system.
This interactive tape recorder system would actually role-play with
operators in training, allowing them to go through a live scenario and then be
critiqued while hearing their responses on tape.
Steve mentioned that at the show in Vancouver, BC, both he and his
associate had lost their voice because they gave so many demos at their booth
but the sales were great. A
record twenty-seven systems were sold at that show.
In 1986, he and Chris Michaels, his future wife,
started their first answering service in Palo Alto, California called American
Executive Service. Here, Steve,
put his knowledge and experience of the industry to work at his own company.
It was a 9:00 to 5:00, Monday through Friday service that only catered
to professionals. Chris managed
the operation while Steve did the marketing and sales.
He was also selling a variety of TAS products at the time to other
services.
A group of vendors had gotten together at this time
wanting to sponsor an expo of Telemessaging products. The association’s name was “Association of Telemessaging
Suppliers” and the board consisted of Judy Meyer, Jim Becker, Bill Hunter,
Frank D’Ascenzo, and Eric Suder. Mr.
Michaels spearheaded this project, setting up sales and marketing, facilities,
speakers, and entertainment for the first vendor sponsored convention of its
kind. It was in Atlanta, Georgia
with Norman Vincent Peale as the guest speaker.
A second expo was held in Phoenix the following year but it did not
prove to be a viable, ongoing venture for this association.
In 1988, TAS Marketing moved to Fort Bragg,
California right on the Mendocino coast.
The Michaels purchased a house on the ocean, which was a bed and
breakfast. They continued with
that business and Steve started selling used answering service equipment.
After a short stint on the Mendocino coast, the
Michaels moved their llamas and marketing facilities to a town outside of
Boulder, in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, in Colorado.
A little log cabin would be their headquarters for two years until
their latest move, which has taken them to Trout Creek, Montana.
Setting up shop in Big Sky Country with one hundred
acres of land, a pond, airstrip, wildlife, and plenty of peace and quiet had
been a dream of Steve’s since he started selling answering machines back in
the 70s. This is where he started
brokering answering bureaus in 1991 with his first sale in Dallas, Texas.
During his career so far, he has sold over 220 businesses including
telephone answering, call center, alarm monitoring, and voice mail companies.
In 1991, Mr. Michaels got into the magazine business
and started the trade publication, Connections Magazine.
He started it from scratch and saw a need for an all-purpose trade
publication that spanned over the traditional TAS applications to encompass
the entire messaging industry. His
varied and wide experience led to articles that were appropriate to the
learning curve for the industry at the time.
In April of 2000, Steve purchased the only competitive magazine in the
industry, the Communicator, formerly the TAS Trader.
His bi-monthly column, “From the Publisher” was written to teach
that lessons learned from everyday life on his ranch and nature could be
applied in the work environment. This
series of stories led him to publish his first book, “Homespun Insight.” The magazine was sold to Peter DeHaan in September 2001 where
it is still the leading publication for the industry today.
In his career, Michaels has seen it all and has
climbed his way from the bottom from selling answering machines where he made
a twenty-five dollar commission up to brokering million dollar deals.
He has published over sixty-five articles, worked for four major
TAS/Voice Mail companies, owned his own telephone answering service, organized
and served on the Board of Directors for ATMS, sold new and used equipment
spanning over twenty-three years, has consulted with and spoken at many
industry conferences and started Connections Magazine.
He looks forward to being a broker for many years to
come. Michaels says, “You know
I’ve been around for a long time and have earned the trust and confidence of
a lot of TAS owners. I have
received calls from individuals who I had sold equipment for years ago and
they will say, Steve, you did a good job for me eight years ago with my
equipment, now I am ready for you to sell my business.”
“It is gratifying to have worked with individuals
who introduce me to their kids that are now active in the business,”
Michaels concludes. “I am
thankful to all of the people who have supported me throughout the years and
am blessed to be associated with such an outstanding industry.”
Steve
Michaels can be reached at 800-369-6126 or at tas@tasmarketing.com.
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